Deepfake technology uses clever tricks to make videos look real, even when they're not.
Imagine you have a photo of your friend smiling, and you want to make it seem like they’re talking on a phone call. Deepfake does something similar but with videos, making fake faces move just like real ones.
How It Works Like a Puppet Show
Think of deepfake as a puppet show where the puppet is someone’s face. A computer looks at lots of photos and videos of that person, learning how their face moves when they talk, laugh, or blink. Then it uses this knowledge to copy those movements onto another image, like putting your friend’s face on a video of a robot talking.
Like Painting with Digital Colors
Deepfake is also like painting, but with digital colors. The computer takes each part of the face, eyes, mouth, nose, and changes them little by little, frame by frame, so it looks smooth and real, not sudden or strange.
It’s like giving a video a new face that acts just like the real one!
Examples
- A deepfake video makes someone look like they're saying something they never actually said.
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See also
- How do deepfake videos create convincing fake content?
- How do deepfake videos trick us into believing they are real?
- How does deepfake technology create realistic fake videos?
- How do deepfakes work and why are they a growing concern?
- Can You Tell When A Video Is Fake?